What Working Capital Is and Why It Matters
Working capital is defined as current assets minus current liabilities. It measures a company's short-term financial health — whether the assets that will convert to cash within the next year are sufficient to cover obligations due within the next year. For any operating business, working capital management is a daily operational concern: companies run out of cash even while profitable if they fail to manage their receivables, inventory, and payables effectively.
Inadequate working capital is one of the most common causes of small business failure. A profitable business with long collection cycles and slow-moving inventory can face a cash crisis even while its income statement looks healthy — because profit and cash flow are two different things. This is the core concept behind the indirect method cash flow statement, which reconciles the gap between net income and operating cash flow.
The Current Ratio and Quick Ratio
These two ratios are the primary liquidity metrics used to assess working capital adequacy.
Quick Ratio = (Cash + Marketable Securities + Net Receivables) ÷ Current Liabilities
Using Riverside Manufacturing's balance sheet: Current assets: cash $40,000, accounts receivable $85,000, inventory $120,000, prepaid expenses $10,000. Total current assets: $255,000. Current liabilities: accounts payable $70,000, accrued expenses $30,000, current portion of debt $25,000. Total current liabilities: $125,000.
| Ratio | Calculation | Result | Interpretation |
|---|---|---|---|
| Current ratio | $255,000 ÷ $125,000 | 2.04 | $2.04 of current assets per $1 of current liabilities — adequate |
| Quick ratio | $125,000 ÷ $125,000 | 1.00 | Exactly $1 of quick assets per $1 of current liabilities — borderline |
The gap between the current ratio (2.04) and quick ratio (1.00) is significant — it reflects the large inventory balance ($120,000) that is excluded from the quick ratio because it must be sold and collected before it provides cash. This signals that Riverside's liquidity depends heavily on its ability to move inventory — a vulnerability if demand softens.
Net Working Capital: The Absolute Measure
Riverside: $255,000 − $125,000 = $130,000
NWC in absolute terms is useful for tracking trends year over year. Ratios can improve while NWC shrinks if both sides of the equation decline proportionally — the absolute measure catches this. NWC is also used in financial modelling: changes in NWC are a key component of the operating section of the cash flow statement, because working capital changes consume or release cash.
The Cash Conversion Cycle
The cash conversion cycle (CCC) measures how long cash is tied up in the operating cycle — from the time the company pays for inventory to the time it collects cash from customers.
DSO = (Average AR ÷ Credit Sales) × 365 [Days Sales Outstanding]
DPO = (Average AP ÷ COGS) × 365 [Days Payable Outstanding]
CCC = DIO + DSO − DPO
Riverside: COGS $600,000; average inventory $120,000; credit sales $900,000; average AR $85,000; average AP $70,000.
| Component | Calculation | Days |
|---|---|---|
| DIO (Days Inventory Outstanding) | ($120,000 ÷ $600,000) × 365 | 73 days |
| DSO (Days Sales Outstanding) | ($85,000 ÷ $900,000) × 365 | 34 days |
| DPO (Days Payable Outstanding) | ($70,000 ÷ $600,000) × 365 | 43 days |
| CCC = DIO + DSO − DPO | 64 days |
A 64-day CCC means Riverside ties up cash in operations for 64 days on average before recovering it from customers. Shortening any component — faster inventory turnover, quicker customer collections, or extended supplier terms — shortens the CCC and frees up cash.
Managing Receivables
The receivables management objective is to minimise DSO without damaging customer relationships. Strategies include: tightening credit approval standards for new customers, offering early payment discounts (e.g., 2/10 net 30) to incentivise faster collection, actively following up on overdue accounts through a systematic collections process, and using invoice factoring or receivables financing when cash is urgently needed.
The trade-off: stricter credit standards reduce sales volume. Looser credit increases sales but increases bad debt risk and extends DSO. The optimal policy balances the revenue benefit of extended credit against the cost of carrying receivables and the expected bad debt loss.
Managing Inventory
Excess inventory ties up cash, incurs carrying costs (storage, insurance, obsolescence), and inflates the DIO component of the CCC. The economic order quantity (EOQ) model optimises order size to minimise total ordering and carrying costs. Just-in-time (JIT) systems reduce inventory to near zero by synchronising deliveries with production needs — dramatically shortening the CCC but increasing supply chain vulnerability.
Managing Payables
Extending DPO — taking longer to pay suppliers — effectively provides free short-term financing. However, consistently stretching payment beyond terms damages supplier relationships, may cost early payment discounts, and signals financial distress. Optimal payables management takes full advantage of payment terms without exceeding them.
When Negative Working Capital Is a Sign of Strength
Counterintuitively, some of the world's most financially strong businesses operate with negative working capital. Retailers like Walmart and online businesses like Amazon collect cash from customers immediately (or before fulfilling orders) but pay suppliers on 30-to-90-day terms. The result: customer cash flows in before supplier payments go out — the business operates on supplier financing. A negative CCC is actually a sign of extraordinary business model strength, not weakness. The context always determines the interpretation.
Practice Working Capital and Ratio Questions
PrepQBank covers all working capital ratios, cash conversion cycle, and liquidity analysis with adaptive questions and full worked solutions.
Practice working capital →